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Jan 29, 2013
01/13
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this -- and looking at it at this distance that we made it for almost no money at all in no time in london because we felt it had to be made so one young cameraman and one other person, we went out each day and put it together and "lord of the flies" i've written a lot about how we rediscovered the whole principles of movie making because we had to do it with no means whatsoever and that is interesting in movies but having made my first movie in studio, i never want to do that again. >> back to the point of making movies and what you did and the reason you made them, are movies and theater today exercising the amount of power they should to provide a link with the great issues of our time? >> television does that. i think we see that where minority was considered elitist and snobbish and that one shouldn't go along with today it's on the country because these are very concentrated forms for a relative number of people, something that brings even a drop of something more positive into the world sr. worthwhile. that's all. it's just -- paul scofield said that in "tell me lies" where in the m
this -- and looking at it at this distance that we made it for almost no money at all in no time in london because we felt it had to be made so one young cameraman and one other person, we went out each day and put it together and "lord of the flies" i've written a lot about how we rediscovered the whole principles of movie making because we had to do it with no means whatsoever and that is interesting in movies but having made my first movie in studio, i never want to do that again....
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Jan 21, 2013
01/13
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. >> rose: what has it changed in london, in great britain about the relationship between murdoch and the government? part of it they say is a rot of people were intimidated. >> which i'm sure is true. >> rose: and they're less intimidated now. >> i think it was a mutually beneficial relationship between the murdoch empire and all its guises and the government of the day. it's not an unusual thing, media owners to have relationships with the government at the time. and for mutual benefit where appropriate. and i think it probably was a case of that, and then what happened is you had a kind "reservoir dogs." you had the politicians exposed for expenses and fiddling their lunch bills and building moats at public expense and so on. they felt enraged by that. some of them went to jail. they then gleefully targeted the journalists. in the middle of it you have the police targeted by everybody. >> rose: they were brought into it-- >> right. and they may target everybody else in revenge as well. you have a "reservoir dog" situation. >> rose: everybody turning on everybody? >> i think it's bu
. >> rose: what has it changed in london, in great britain about the relationship between murdoch and the government? part of it they say is a rot of people were intimidated. >> which i'm sure is true. >> rose: and they're less intimidated now. >> i think it was a mutually beneficial relationship between the murdoch empire and all its guises and the government of the day. it's not an unusual thing, media owners to have relationships with the government at the time. and...
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Jan 1, 2013
01/13
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also attended the summer olympics in london and even made a bet with former president bill clinton on the ryder cup which he paid up for, by the way. this year i talked to the biggest names in sport about what it takes to be the very best and what it feels like to be a world champion. what a moment. for you, eh? the green jacket. can i touch it? >> yeah, go ahead. >> how does it feel? >> it feels nice. >> how does it really feel to be bubba watson right now? >> it's overwhelming. people like yourself wanting to talk to me. for me to come to new york and do these interviews and meet you for first time. it's a special time. >> why have you given me the big exclusive interview. somebody's told me the rather unnerving reason why. >> because when you were on this other show "america's got talent" you were a [ bleep ]. so i wanted to come here and make fun of you just like you make fun of everybody else. >> i heard that was the reason. it genuinely was, wasn't it? >> yeah. >> because i'm a [ bleep ]. i don't care how we got you here, i'll take it. >> how hard is it, mike, for people who hav
also attended the summer olympics in london and even made a bet with former president bill clinton on the ryder cup which he paid up for, by the way. this year i talked to the biggest names in sport about what it takes to be the very best and what it feels like to be a world champion. what a moment. for you, eh? the green jacket. can i touch it? >> yeah, go ahead. >> how does it feel? >> it feels nice. >> how does it really feel to be bubba watson right now? >>...
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Jan 17, 2013
01/13
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they are in london now. they managed to get to a flight to get to london. we don't know the fate of other americans there. we know that the algerians with helicopters and special forces stormed this gas plant today. and major battle with islamists, dreamists, happened. several people were killed. we just don't know theout come yet. we do know that this is largely over at this point, but there are a number of people who are unaccounted for and we're trying to get the ground truth of the trauma that has been going on for several days in algeria. meantime, the threat from this islamist extremenist that rion is continuing. let's bring in the panel. tucker carlson from dailycaller.com. mara liasson, national public radio. syndicated columnist, charles krauthammer. obviously, tucker, good news is two americans we know are safe. we don't know about the others and there could be several owes. >> there is much we don't know. this is what we doe no. it could be a harbinger of other strategy of al-qaeda and terror groups. if you want to call disruption to the united s
they are in london now. they managed to get to a flight to get to london. we don't know the fate of other americans there. we know that the algerians with helicopters and special forces stormed this gas plant today. and major battle with islamists, dreamists, happened. several people were killed. we just don't know theout come yet. we do know that this is largely over at this point, but there are a number of people who are unaccounted for and we're trying to get the ground truth of the trauma...
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Jan 18, 2013
01/13
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employees, the wives of teammates, the london times. he says i don't know what i see them. is sued so many people i can't keep track. >> he kept going on about it. every word he published was true. >> there is something wrong with them. i think he is trying to feel the you see and and it can't feel. how can you feel when for 15 years, not only did he take illegal drugs, they all did in cycling. if anyone gets in my way, i am not just going to condemn them, i will sue them. on will make their lives miserable. >> let's watch what he says was the last time he'd sec, and not sure i believe him. let's watch this. >> the last time i cross the line? that line? 2005. and so -- >> you did not a dope. >> and the biological passport was in place. >> does that include blood transfusions? >> absolutely. >> in 2009 you did no doubt in your blood transfusions in 2010. >> 2009 and 2010. >> i don't believe a word he is an. >> i believe it because what he did in 2008 when they did the biological passport, he was going to get caught. that is why he didn't do it. >> tube-like and? for changing
employees, the wives of teammates, the london times. he says i don't know what i see them. is sued so many people i can't keep track. >> he kept going on about it. every word he published was true. >> there is something wrong with them. i think he is trying to feel the you see and and it can't feel. how can you feel when for 15 years, not only did he take illegal drugs, they all did in cycling. if anyone gets in my way, i am not just going to condemn them, i will sue them. on will...
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Jan 18, 2013
01/13
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would i actually be seating if i was suing the london times, if i was trying to pop publication booking in france, no. the more i say no and the stronger i say it, the more people are going to believe, come on, he's lance, and he passed 500 drug tests. and he didn't do it. just like i said in the story. >> given the scale of his betrayal to you personally, will you ever talk to him again? >> no, there's no point. i don't bear any malice. >> don't you? i i would. >> i don't. at the end of the day, i'm a seasoned journalist. i'm a investigative reporter. i should have known better. when he said he was dropping his fight against the uada, there was something that didn't make sense. you don't fight for ten years and then drop it. >> let me update you. they're coming to this now. lance armstrong has now confessed in his own words, from his own lips on national television, to oprah winfrey that he doped, that he cheated, and therefore that he lied to inentire world about the real reason he was able to be a champion cyclist. the confession is apparently ongoing, details, he took a number of ba
would i actually be seating if i was suing the london times, if i was trying to pop publication booking in france, no. the more i say no and the stronger i say it, the more people are going to believe, come on, he's lance, and he passed 500 drug tests. and he didn't do it. just like i said in the story. >> given the scale of his betrayal to you personally, will you ever talk to him again? >> no, there's no point. i don't bear any malice. >> don't you? i i would. >> i...
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Jan 28, 2013
01/13
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the best one was this guy that was being interviewed in london. he had participated in a triathlon which is what swimming, bicycling. >> rose: running. >> 94. >> yeah. >> and the question they asked him was are you going to do this again. and he says yes, i'm going to keep doing it until i get old. and i have never forgotten that. >> what did you bring to this because of the remarkable career you had in acting it to directing. what did that give new. >> well, i think some of the best directors were actors, ben a flect, warren beatty, i mean you know t doesn't hurt. >> but what does it give you. >> well, this is a long answer. because this is a hundred-year-old art form give or take. in fact, i think i'm almost as old as sound, you know, really, because i was born in 37 and i think sound came in around 29 or 30. and it's about the machine, unfortunately, is that you go to work and the clock is ticking and it's like a train coming to run you over and the film is like a canvas on a railroad track. and the closer it gets, and so just before the train
the best one was this guy that was being interviewed in london. he had participated in a triathlon which is what swimming, bicycling. >> rose: running. >> 94. >> yeah. >> and the question they asked him was are you going to do this again. and he says yes, i'm going to keep doing it until i get old. and i have never forgotten that. >> what did you bring to this because of the remarkable career you had in acting it to directing. what did that give new. >> well,...
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Jan 16, 2013
01/13
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karen cho is live in london with the latest. the news about the dream liner keeps getting worse by the day. >> indeed, bill, the significance around this, i covered the maiden flight that went from tokyo to hong kong. and this highlights the collaboration between the japanese manufacturers who produce about a third of the components in this aircraft. the fact it's been grounded by the two major carriers in japan sends a signal to the industry. one of the issues for boeing is this a water shed moment for the company if their investigations and on going that lead to design changes that could mean more delays and also cost over run for the companies. so already boeing has said this should in fact be about break even on about 1,100 new dream liners. the question is whether the company will even make a profit on what is meant to be one of the most fuel efficient aircraft. >> karen, also today a lot of buzz about facebook taking the plunge into the web search business. and all that personalized data that they have exclusively with all
karen cho is live in london with the latest. the news about the dream liner keeps getting worse by the day. >> indeed, bill, the significance around this, i covered the maiden flight that went from tokyo to hong kong. and this highlights the collaboration between the japanese manufacturers who produce about a third of the components in this aircraft. the fact it's been grounded by the two major carriers in japan sends a signal to the industry. one of the issues for boeing is this a water...
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Jan 16, 2013
01/13
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a helicopter crashes on the streets in london. two people killed but at least two others rescued from that fiery wreck. we'll bring you the details ahead. >>> our big question for you today, did the nra go a little too far by focusing on president obama's daughters in their new ad? [ male announcer ] where do you turn for legal matters? maybe you want to incorporate a business. or protect your family with a will or living trust. and you'd like the help of an attorney. at legalzoom a legal plan attorney is available in most states with every personalized document to answer questions. get started at legalzoom.com today. and now you're protected. get started at legalzoom.com today. [ female announcer ] some people like to pretend a flood could never happen to them. and that their homeowners insurance protects them. [ thunder crashes ] it doesn't. stop pretending. only flood insurance covers floods. ♪ visit floodsmart.gov/pretend to learn your risk. and these come together, one thing you can depend on is that these will come togethe
a helicopter crashes on the streets in london. two people killed but at least two others rescued from that fiery wreck. we'll bring you the details ahead. >>> our big question for you today, did the nra go a little too far by focusing on president obama's daughters in their new ad? [ male announcer ] where do you turn for legal matters? maybe you want to incorporate a business. or protect your family with a will or living trust. and you'd like the help of an attorney. at legalzoom a...
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Jan 24, 2013
01/13
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>> they're enormously patriotic but their children somehow end up in new york, and paris and london. they give up. >> i don't agree with that. maybe that's true of some of the cases. i know a lot of people who have come back to israel-- >> it's quiet now. there is a kind of eerie-- strange and eerie quiet but it's not going to last. >> i'm not saying it will last, but i do think-- go ahead. i'm sorry, demis. >> david, you're identifying one thing that is a simple reality. for israel's long-term well-being the idea that it maintains the occupation is not in its interest because not only the effect it has on the values but the demographic issue. the longer this goes on the greater the danger that in fact you lose a two-state outcome and in the end israel has to go back to a unilateral withdrawal. so it is in israel's interest to find a way to go forward. it is in israel's electric as port was saying, to find a way to strengthen the palestinian authority. one the administration has to be engaged but i would build an engagement around an agenda that focuses on what steps do we take to de
>> they're enormously patriotic but their children somehow end up in new york, and paris and london. they give up. >> i don't agree with that. maybe that's true of some of the cases. i know a lot of people who have come back to israel-- >> it's quiet now. there is a kind of eerie-- strange and eerie quiet but it's not going to last. >> i'm not saying it will last, but i do think-- go ahead. i'm sorry, demis. >> david, you're identifying one thing that is a simple...
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Jan 18, 2013
01/13
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in london today leon panetta had warnings for those who are taking hostages. >> warnings should be on notice that they will find no sanctuary, no refuge, not in algeria, not in north africa, anywhere. those who would wantonly attack our country and our people have no place to hide. >> we just heard from secretary panetta about this warning that he is giving, but essentially what is it that the united states is doing about that? >> well, they and the british government have said sort of diplomatic rapid reaction forces to algeria, essentially to support the hostages that have been released, people that are trained in trauma and counseling and you can expedite things like passports that may be lost in the firefight and the chaos that ensued. but they haven't really been given access directly to the sites. this british plane anyway has gone to an airfield, that's about 250 kilometers north of the gas field. so they're being kept a long way back and there is clear frustration both here in london and in washington with the communication or lack of communication by the algerians. >> we don'
in london today leon panetta had warnings for those who are taking hostages. >> warnings should be on notice that they will find no sanctuary, no refuge, not in algeria, not in north africa, anywhere. those who would wantonly attack our country and our people have no place to hide. >> we just heard from secretary panetta about this warning that he is giving, but essentially what is it that the united states is doing about that? >> well, they and the british government have...
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Jan 16, 2013
01/13
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of people didn't, although david wall whosh is irish journalist who worked for the sunday times of london was the early skeptic and wrote conceptcally about him from the beginning and really suffered greatly because of it, and in the end, he was right. >> also add to that all three of us here have done reporting on doping in sports and the bar is really high, so the difference between knowing something as a person and being logical and reasonable and being able to print it when you are going probably to be sued, is a high one, i get this question all the time, you might really -- i am sure all three of us know other athletes we know athletes who are doping but haven't quite met that bar to really publish it so when you end up in court you can defend it. >> so you said cycling is dead, so what happens to lance armstrong? david, start with you. >> well, i think he -- i think for some people they will see this as a starting of a certain kind of rehabilitation, probably people who haven't been following it close enough to sort of followed the stories of the people he hurt along the way, i thi
of people didn't, although david wall whosh is irish journalist who worked for the sunday times of london was the early skeptic and wrote conceptcally about him from the beginning and really suffered greatly because of it, and in the end, he was right. >> also add to that all three of us here have done reporting on doping in sports and the bar is really high, so the difference between knowing something as a person and being logical and reasonable and being able to print it when you are...
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Jan 15, 2013
01/13
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. >>> a controversial story out of london. british airways worker was sent home from her job for wearing a cross. top european court said she was the target of religious discrimination. zain verjee is in london to tell us more. good morning. >> good morning to you, carol. her name is nadia ueda, she was sitting at a british airways desk and had a big crucifix around her neck and a chain and told she had to be transferred to another job so she said excuse me, wait a minute, this is discrimination. she filed and filed and filed here in the uk and her case was heard and then dismissed over and over again. i think it was rejected like six times. anyway, she persisted, she went to the european human rights court and they basically were weighing what b.a.'s perception of its corporate image should be or versus her own right and desire to wear any kind of religious artifact that she wanted to. anyway they said and they ruled and this was significant because it was the first time in a case like this something had happened that she was
. >>> a controversial story out of london. british airways worker was sent home from her job for wearing a cross. top european court said she was the target of religious discrimination. zain verjee is in london to tell us more. good morning. >> good morning to you, carol. her name is nadia ueda, she was sitting at a british airways desk and had a big crucifix around her neck and a chain and told she had to be transferred to another job so she said excuse me, wait a minute, this...